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and A WOMAN’S WORK
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LYDIA E. P1NKHAM
Nature and a woman’s work com¬
bined have produced the grandest
remedy for woman’s ills that the
world has ever known.
In the good old-fashioned days of
our grandmothers they relied upon
the roots and herbs of the field to
cure disease and mitigate suffering.
The Indians on our Western
Plains to-day can produce roots and
herbs for every ailment, and skilled cure
diseases that baffle the most
physicians who have spent years in
the study of drugs.
From the roots and herbs of the
field Lydia E. Pinkham more than
thirty years ago gave to the women
of the world a remedy for their pe¬
culiar ills, more potent and effica¬
cious than any combination of drugs.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound is now for'woman’s recognized as the
standard remedy ills.
Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St.,
Louisiana, Mo., writes:
“ Complete restoration to health
means so much to me that for the sake
of other suffering women I am willing
to make my troubles public.
. . For twelve years I had been suffer¬
ing with the worst forms of female ills.
During that time I had eleven different
physicians without help. No tongue
can tell what I suffered, and at times I
could hardly walk. About two advice. years
ago 1 wrote Mrs. Pinkham for
I followed it, and can truly say that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re¬
stored health and strength. It is
worth mountains of gold to suffering
women.
What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege¬
table Compound did for Mrs. Muff,
it will do for other suffering women.
No use turning the other cheek to
the man who strikes you. He doesn’t
mind hitting twice in the same place.
Coffee Drinking on the Increase.
Coffee bids fair tb become the most
widely used beverage in the world.
Its importation into this country has
reached enormous proportions. New
Orleans is a close second to New York
in number of bags received annually,
and these two ports almost monop¬
olize the green coffee business of this
country. Roasters and packers of
these two cities have an advantage
over those of the interior, in as much
as they have no expensive railroad
freight to pay on the heavy green
coffee. There is a great difference
in the coffee drunk in the North and
the South. In the North the coffee is
roasted a light brown and is made
Into a weak decoction resembling tea.
In the South the coffee is roasted a
rich, dark brown, which brews into
a rich, frothy liquid of pronounced
flavor and greater strength. Dealers
all recognize the difference between
“Northern Roast” and “Southern
Roast.” The best and lowest priced
prepared coffee for Southern people,
therefore, comes from New Orleans.
The most popular and satisfactory
brand is called Luzianne Coffee. It is
a well known fact that this coffee has
twice the strength of ordinary brands
and is, therefore, very economical.
Every enterprising grocer in the
South has it for sale.
Even the naked truth appears in
better light if clothed in polite lan¬
guage.
DEATH TO KING WORM.
11 Everywhere I go I speak for tettmone,
because it cured me of ringworm in its
worst form. My whole chest from neck to
waist was raw as beef; but tettebine cured
me. It-also cured a bad case TannehiM of piles.” St., So
says Mrs. M. F. Jones of 28
Pittsburg, Pa. Tettbbinb, the great skin
remedy, is sold by druggists or sent by mail
for 50c. WfiteJ. T. Shuptbine, Dept. A,
Savann ah, Ga.
___
The mental calibre of a man may
be told by the regalia he wears when
he has his picture taken.
THE DUTCH )
BOY PAINTER
STANDS FOR
PAINT QUALITY
IT IS FOUND ONLYQH
PUREWHITE LEAD
MADE BY ««
THE
OLD DUTCH
PROCESS.
she. ‘
Sanbaq-SclWf
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IM’KK.VATIONAI, LKSSON <’0.11
.’MEATS FOR AUGUST 39.
Subject: David Spares Saul’s Life, t
Sam. 26—Golden Text. Luke 6:27
—Commit Verse 2!—Bead Chap¬
ters 21-2.>—Commentary.
TIME.—10 60 E. C. PLACE.—The
Hill of Hachilah.
EXPOSITION__T. David reasons
with Saul, vs. 17-20. Saul is in
David’s power and completely at
David’s mercy a, second time. (ys.
1-12; cf. ch. 24:3-3). And a second
time David shows the greatness of
his character. He will not stretch
forth his hand against the Lord’s
anointed (v. 11). Abishai was right
in judging that God had delivered
David’s enemy into his hand (v. 8; cf.
v. 23; ch. 24:18. 13; Josh. 24:44;
Judges 1:4), but he was wrong in his
judgment of what David should do
with his enemy whom God had de¬
livered into his hand. God gives our
enemies into our hands that we may
save them,* not that we may destroy
them. David’s real magnanimity
comes out in that he not only refused
to slay Saul himself, but also would
not permit another (v. 9). The death
of Saul would mean the end of his
•own trials and his accession to the
throne, but he will not accept deliver¬
ance and glory by questionable
means. David was truly a man of
faith. In his conscience he had been
less keen. He could easily have satis¬
fied it by saying, “I did not kill him. • *
But David’s conscience was not of
that sort. Saul had been rejected by
Jehovah, nevertheless the fact stood
that he was the Lord’s anointed (v. 9),
and the anointed of the Lord was
sacred in David’s sight. No one can
stretch forth his hands against the
Lord’s anointed and be guiltless (Ps.
105:15). It is well to remember in
the application of this principle that
in the present dispensation all Christ’s
are the Lord's anointed (1 John 2:20-
27, R. V.). David’s respect for the
anointed of Jehovah, even though
that anointed one was his personal
enemy, was deep and abiding (ch.
24: 6, 7; 2 Sam. 1:14-16). David was
entirely content to leave the ven¬
geance of his wrong and the estab¬
lishment of himself in the place to
which God had appointed him entirely
in God’s hands. When Saul was thor¬
oughly awakened to the fact that
David had had him in his power and
yet had spared his life he was brought
to momentary repentance. He ad¬
dresses the David, whom he had
sought to murder, very tenderly (v.
17), and David answers with mar¬
velous humility. He calls his would
be assassin, Saul, his Lord and King.
He seeks to awaken Saul to his folly
by pointing out his own innocence.
He challenges Saul to point out one
thing that he had done that deserved
his hate. Nothing can exceed David’s
marvelous humility (v. 19). The
thing that David especially bemoans
is that he is driven away from fellow¬
ship with Jehovah and His people (v.
14). He speaks of himself as a flea
or a partridge and points out to Saul
how foolish it is for the mighty king
of Israel to be hunting for a flea or a
partridge in the mountains. There is
no insincerity in this. David enter¬
tained the most humble opinion of
himself in spite of his rare gifts. He
humbled himself andGodexalted him.
II. Saul’s Brief Repentance and
Gratitude to David, vs. 21-25. Saul,
blinded though he was by envy, was
forced to see the generosity of David.
He says the very thing that every
sinner needs to say, “I have sinned. 3 »
But there is no real and saving con¬
viction of sin and consequently no
permanent turning from sin (cf. ch.
15:24, 30; Luke 24:17; Ex. 9:27;
Num. 23:34; Matt. 27:4). There is
no saving power in conviction of sin
if one goes right on sinning (Prov.
28:13). Saul promises that he will
no more do David harm because his
life had been precious in David’s eyes.
He never had another opportunity to
do David harm. Saul’s description
of his own conduct was both true and
expressive. He had “played the fool
and erred exceedingly.” That is pre¬
cisely what every sinner and every¬
one who fights against God is doing.
Unfortunately, though Saul recog¬
nized the true character of his con¬
duct, he did not quit it. In that too
he has many imitators. All the Sauls
on earth cannot prevent a righteous
man from getting his just and full
due (cf. Eph. 6:8). David would not
even keep the king’s spear as a me¬
mento of his victory. David knew
that God deals with us as we deal
with our fellow-men (vs. 23, 24; cf.
Ps. 18:25; Matt. 5:7; 6:14, 15; 7:2).
David’s whole future history snows
how much his life was "set by in the
eyes of the Lord.” As he had not un¬
dertaken his own deliverance he
looked to the Lord to deliver him out
of all tribulation (v. 24). This the
Lord did, giving complete deliverance
from perils that arose again and
again and threatened to overthrow
his throne. David reaped the good
seed he had sown (cf. Ps. 18). For a
moment Saul was entirely reconciled
to David. He blessed him and de¬
clared his triumph, but David thor¬
oughly understood how little confi¬
dence was to be placed in the per¬
manence of Saul’s repentance.
LEADING QUESTIONS. — What
truths about Christ are suggested by
the lesson? What characteristics of
David are brought out in the lesson?
What does the lesson teach about
faith? What does it teach about
God? W’hat does it teach about treat¬
ment of enemies? What is the best
in the passage?
Maine’s Lateet Snake Story.
An old hen with a larg9 family of
email chickens, was recently given an
empty barrel turned down on Its side,
for a coop on the writer’s premises.
One day recently the hen gave the
signal of distress used by all good
grangers and the barrel was quickly
surrounded by the fighting * members
of the household.
A large snake was found In the bar¬
rel and quickly lynched, Several
bunches were noticed on the reptile’s
body and he was ripped up the back
with a pair of shears and seven chick¬
ens were found gasping for breath.
They are all alive yet.—Lewiston
Journal.
^Elixir §p/rup^]igs ^8
enna
ly acts the gently bowels, yet cleanses prompt¬
on
the assists system in e||ectually, overcoming
one
permanently. habitual constipation To get its
the oenejicial ejects buy
genuine. I'lanujacturedi by tho
CALIFORNIA
J ltr VZJJL Jtv VJ T3~h Jt
SOLDBYLUADINGDRUCdSTS-504p.. m/.m.i.iA nnnarim B0TTUL crrrrir
—--- ;-------------------—-----
Free electricity travels at the same
rate as light—186,000 miles a second.
Through wire, only 16,000 miles a sec
ond.
KEEP YOUR SKIN HEALTHY.
Tett’emne has done wonders for suffer
ers from eczema, tetter ground . itch, , ery
sipelas, infant sore head, chaps, chafes and
other forms of skin diseases. In aggravart
ed cases of eczema its cures have been mar
velous and thousands of people sing its
E raises. 50c. at druggists or by mail from
T. Shuptbine, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
The indestructibility of matter Is j
the ^ one thing that saves the universe |
*from wreck at the hands of the small
boy, declares Puck.
Hicks’ Capudine Cures Women’s
and Monthly Headache. Pains, Backache, Nervousness,
It’s Liquid. Effects imme¬
results. diately. Prescribed by physicians with beat j
10c., 25c., ana 50c.. at drug stores, j
THE FREIGHT.
Knicker—What is the prospect for
the summer? nffifc.
Booker—That the railroads’ princi¬
pal business will be swinging candi¬
dates around the circle.
To Drive Out Malaria und Build Uf
the System
Take the Old Standard Grove’s Taste¬
less Chill Tonic. You know what you
are taking. The formula ia plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui¬
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
and children. 50c.
Among the richer classes 342 In 1000
live to 60 years of age, in the middle
classes 175 do so, and 156 only of the
laboring class survive to reach CO
years.
25c. WILL CURE YOUR CORNS
If you invest It in a bottle of abbott’s east
Indian cobn paint. It removes hard or soft
corns, bunions or sore, callous spots on the
feet, warts or Indurations of the skin. No
pain, no cutting, no “eating” of the flesh, j
no after soreness; quick, safe, sure. At
druggist or by mail from The Abbott Co.,
Bavannah, Ga.
.It is again noticed, say the Cleve¬
land Plain Dealer, that when times
are depressed men go back to the
farm—which is one result that cannot
he deplored.
NUBjya It does not make you sick like
calomel, but Is quick, thorough and
gentle in its action.
Puts the Sluggish Liver to Work
TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer for If
American Cotton College Milledgeville ,
Georgia.
For the education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton
Buyers, Manufacturers, and all others, young or old. who are unable to classify
and put the correct valuation on 18 Grades of Co! to a. Thirty day scholarships in
cur sample rooms, or six weeks’ correspondence course under expert cotton men
will complete you. Big demand for cotton grader* and cotton buyerz. Session opens
Sept 1st. Correspondence course year round. Writs at once for further j-a-ticulars
FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND
SIXTY-FIVE MEN
with teams are selling our products to
FARMERS in thirty-four different States.
Seventy useful articles that country people
need. We furnish the goods and give agents
time to turn them into money. Address,
J. R.WATKINS CO..Winona, Minn.
Nursing Mothers and Malaria
The Old Standard GROWS TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, Showing it
is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form.. For adults and chiraren, 50c.
* to work off some cheap coffee ho lind long had on hand,—
N told his customers times were hard (1) and loots a pound
|! II 5 was enough to nay for coffee. They followed his advice
3 and got quantity a tasteless, make dyspepsia-breeding showing for article strength. requiring Before a
] j double liis to any
Qfl & he realized it customers were going elsewhere to buy
mi delicious, double-strength, lasttwice-as-lnng LUZIANNE
f COFFEE, whose kind. price—iiocts—is really only half asexpen
sire as the 15cts
m U • LUZMNNE COFFEE
HOl.lt EV F. K T WII KB E.
Record Loq Drive.
A drive of 3,000,000 feet of logs
arrived at the inlet of Lake
where the Mississippi River flows
to the lake. This drive of logs
brought from Lake Itasca in
thirty days, which is a record
ing feat in driving legs down the
Rtcqlnnl SSippi TUvnr IvlVl. r. Alt All mmlltlnno conditions wei
favorable, the water being high
there being nothing to Impede
progress of the drive.
The logs were cut In the
State Park and along the
River this side of the park,
banked last winter on Lake
and the Mississippi River. The
drive will be brought across Lake
ing, sluiced through the
■between Lake Irving and Lake
midji and finally boomed on the
, east shore of Lake Bemldji to be
In a local sawmill.—Bemldji
spondence St. Paul Pioneer Press.
ECZEMA FOR FIFTY-FIVE YEARS.
Suffered Torments from Birth—Im
Frightful Until Condition—-Got No Help
Cuticura Cured Him.
“I had an itching, tormenting eczema
erver since I came into the world, and 1 am
now a man tifty-five years old. 1 tried all
kinds of medicines I heard of, ’ but found no
rdiet - j was tru]y in a frigh tful curtd mon.
At last I broke out all over with red and
white boils, which kept growing until they
were as big as walnuts, causing great pain
and misery, but I kept from scratching as
v.’el 1 as I could. I was so run down thnt
I could hardly do my work. I used Cuti¬
cura Soap, Ointment, Resolvent, and Pills
for about eight months, and I can truth
fuU j am cured . H&le Bordwell, Tip- r
ton, la., Au C . 17, 1907.”
“I cheerfully endorse the above testi
nmmal. . , It . the'truth. I know Mr. Bord
is
well and know the condition he was in.
Nelson R. Burnett, Tipton, la.”
PLEASANT ANTICIPATIONS,
Mother (in a very low voice)—
"Tommy, your grandfather is very
sick. Can’t you say something nice
to cheer him up a hit?’’
Tommy (in an earnest voice)—
“Grandfather, wouldn’t you like to
have soldiers at your funeral?”
------
John R. Dickey’s old reliable eye water
hurt, cures sore eyes or granulated lids. Don’t
feels good; get the genuine in red box.
Because an Indiana man was fined
$100 for embracing the wrong woman
the Milwfiukee Sentinel advises: “Be¬
fore you hug a girl, take a good look
at her. After that, in a good many
cases, you may not want to hug her.
“Lombard” 'Improved Saw Mills.
VARIABLE FRICTION FEED. Strong. Accurate Md Reliable.
Best material and workmanship, light running,
requires little power; simple, easy to handle.
Are made in several sizes and are good, sub¬
stantial money making machinea down to the
smallest size. Write for catalog showing En¬
gines, Boilers and all Saw Mill suppliea.
Lombard Iron Works 4 Supply Co., - • - Augusta, Ga.
ft Dropsy CURED Quick Give* Relief.
Removes all swelling In 8 to 20
days ; effects a permanent cure
in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment
given Write free. Dr. Nbthtngcan H. H. Green’s be Sons. fairer
Specialists. Box q Atlanta. Gr
I«*> r ‘lJFLdRENCE iw 3
r \4L « ywi ALA.
BP Magnificent buildings, costing $ 100,000 Elegant appointments. Refined and Christian
home Pianos and furniture all new Ideal location near the mountains. All college
courses. Conservatory unsurpassed Teachers from the best schools of Europe (TON ond (/
America Opens ANDERTON. September IS. i%8. For handsome catalog, address M. W HA <}&
; tr.d O. W. Presidents. Florence, Af • jcctoid
Southern Female College students will attend Florence University for 1908-1909.
The tramp who is kicked out of a
house can honestly claim sympathy
! as the victim of a rear-end collision.
I PIEDMONT GOLLEGE
1
mountain location. Rcgalar Pinpnrotorj
and College course*; special course* in HusitioM,
Domestic Science nn<l Mimic. Superior ndvnntegea.
Reasonable prtoea. For oatalogue and further Infor
mation addrom
HENRY C. NEWELL ' Acting PresIM.
Take the Place of Calomel
Oonatlpfitlon Bend* poiHonous matter Stomach, bounding
through the body. Dull headache, Loss Hour
Feted Wreath, the Bleared Eyes, of Energy and Ad
petite Liver are purest sign* of he affliction. They Youngs
Pills nostively cure constipation. awaken
the the bowel*. piuggish fiiuggisn strengthen liver the to weakened better action, Induce cleanse the
and aid They do pnrtR, Salivate, appe¬
tite digestion. do. not Price25 no from mat¬
ter what yon eat. drink or oeuts
your dealer or direct from
J. M. YOUNG. JR., WAYCROSS. GA.
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washed
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Game All dealers. “WHIZ," Booklet, Sample and Parlor Card
10c.
PACIFIC COAST BORA-X CO., New York.
WL DOUGLAS
S 300 SHOES 8 ,350
im
'M
\
rT. VV. L. Dougins makes and sell, more
men's *3.00 and S3.SO ilioea than any
other manufacturer In the world. l>e
cauge they hold their shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
Shoes at All Prices, for Every Memb er of the
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses 4 Children
W.L.Donglu $8-00 and 90.00 CKIt Edge Shoes cannot
h* equalled $2.00 at shoe* any price. the W. beet L Dou|lae 91.00 and
are In the world
Vast Color Eyelet* Voed ExeluHvely.
0 -Take No NuOxtitMLu. \V. 1.. Douulnn
name and price Is stamped on bottom. Sold
everywhere. ot the world. Shoes Catalogue mailed from factory to any
cart, free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark Si., Brockton, Meas.
#
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un¬
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, .‘oapand tooth preparation*
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin¬
fecting and deodor- L /<
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex- B
ccllence and econ- I
omy. Invaluable L JorTtr 2*WTittPTir.
for inflamed eyes, e %
uterine throat and catarrh. nasal and At ill fjj
drug and toilet |j r * •> #3
*
stores, 50 cents, or £
by mail postpaid.
I Lalgc orno Trial I Hill OdL.piG Qqmnlo
V/ITM "HEALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK SENT mil
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
(At-35'oe)